In a coffee shop last week, I watched someone pull out a notebook during what I am guessing was a business meeting. While everyone else tapped away on laptops, she wrote longhand, her pen moving deliberately across the page. The person next to her smirked—probably thinking how inefficient it was.
But here’s what struck me: she was the only one who never asked anyone to repeat themselves. She was the only one whose ideas seemed to flow without the constant pause-delete-retype dance I saw on every screen around her.
I keep a physical notebook for first drafts and interview notes, even though it’s probably considered “inefficient” by modern standards. A colleague once asked why I bothered when digital tools could search, organize, and sync everything instantly. The answer came to me during one of those long walks I take without podcasts when I need to think through a complicated piece. There’s something about the physical act of writing—the resistance of pen on paper, the inability to delete a thought before it’s fully formed—that changes how we think.
The science behind why your hand remembers what your keyboard forgets
Ever wonder why you can still remember notes you took by hand in college but struggle to recall what you typed in yesterday’s meeting? There’s fascinating neuroscience at play here.
According to The Bronfenbrenner Center for Translational Research, “Handwriting stimulates complex brain connections essential in encoding new information and forming memories..” This isn’t just about nostalgia or preference—it’s about how our brains physically process information differently when we write versus type.
Think about it: when you write by hand, you’re creating each letter from scratch. Your brain has to plan the movement, execute it, and adjust in real-time. This engages multiple areas of your brain simultaneously, creating what researchers call a “memory trace” that’s far stronger than what happens when you hit uniform keys on a keyboard.
I discovered this firsthand when I started baking during a particularly stressful period. The precision required, the inability to multitask or check email while kneading dough—it reminded me of writing by hand. Both force you to slow down and be present with what you’re creating. You can’t cmd+z a word you’ve written in ink, just like you can’t unmix ingredients once they’re combined.
Why constraints actually free your thinking
Here’s something counterintuitive: the limitations of paper might actually expand your thinking. When you type, you can endlessly edit, rearrange, and second-guess yourself. But with a notebook, you have to commit to your thoughts, however imperfect they might be.
A professor in college once told me I “wrote like I was afraid to have an opinion.” That comment stung, but it changed how I approached analysis. What I realized years later is that my tentative writing came from the ability to constantly revise on a computer. I’d soften my arguments with each edit, smoothing away anything that felt too bold or definitive.
Paper doesn’t let you do that. Once the ink hits the page, you’re committed. This constraint forces you to think before you write, but it also prevents you from overthinking. You have to trust your first instinct more, and surprisingly, that first instinct is often your most authentic voice.
I write best in the morning before I’ve talked to anyone or checked email or Slack. Part of that is about having a clear mind, but part of it is about approaching the blank page—literal page—without the weight of everyone else’s opinions. When you write by hand in those quiet morning hours, you’re having a conversation with yourself that technology can’t interrupt.
The unexpected social power of analog note-taking
Have you noticed how people respond differently when you take notes by hand versus on a device? When you open a laptop in a meeting, there’s always that slight tension—are you taking notes or checking email? But when you pull out a notebook, something shifts. People lean in more. They speak more freely.
There’s also something about the pace of handwriting that changes the dynamic of conversations. You can’t capture every word when writing by hand, so you have to listen for meaning, for the important points. This selective attention makes you a better listener. You’re processing and synthesizing in real-time, not just transcribing.
Making space for thoughts that need time to emerge
National Geographic reports that “Research shows that the act of putting pen to paper activates multiple brain regions, improving memory retention and cognitive function.” But beyond the cognitive benefits, I think there’s something else at play: the relationship between speed and depth of thought.
Digital tools are built for speed and efficiency. But not all thoughts arrive fully formed and ready for publication. Some ideas need to meander across the page, to loop back on themselves, to sit half-finished in the margins until they’re ready to emerge.
When I’m stuck on a piece, I often find that the solution comes not from staring at my computer screen but from opening my notebook and just starting to write—about anything. The physical act of moving my hand across the page seems to unlock something that typing can’t reach. Maybe it’s because handwriting is slower, giving our subconscious time to catch up. Or maybe it’s because the brain pathways activated by handwriting connect to different parts of our creativity.
Final thoughts
The next time you see someone pull out a paper notebook in a world of tablets and laptops, don’t assume they’re being stubborn or old-fashioned. They might have discovered what neuroscience is now proving: that the ancient technology of pen and paper activates our brains in ways that screens simply can’t replicate.
Some thoughts really do need to travel through your hand to become real. They need the resistance of paper, the commitment of ink, the time it takes to form each letter. In our rush to digitize everything, we might be leaving behind one of our most powerful tools for thinking, remembering, and creating. The question isn’t whether digital tools are bad—they’re incredibly useful. The question is whether we’re willing to admit that sometimes, the old ways serve purposes we’re only beginning to understand.
















